Foster v. Master and Wardens of Port of New Orleans
Foster v. Master and Wardens of Port of New Orleans
Opinion
delivered'the opinion of the court.
This controversy has arisen out of an act of the legislature of Louisiana, approved March 6, 1869. By the first section it was made the duty of the master and'wardens of the port of New Orleans to offer their services to make a survey of the hatches of all sea-goirig vessels which should arrive 'at that pork; and a penalty was prescribed for the neglect of this duty. The second section declares “ that it shall be unlawful for' any person other than the said master and wardens, or their legally constituted deputy, to make any survey of the hatches of seagoing- vessels coming to said port of New Orleans, or to make any survey of damaged goods coming on'board of such vessels, whether such survey be made on board or on shore, or to give certificates on orders for sale of such damaged goods at auction, or to do any other of the acts and things prescribed by law for said master and wardens to do and perform; and the- person doing such illegal and forbidden acts, his instigators and encouragers, shall be liable and bound to pay in solido to the said master and wardens $100, with damages and costs, tor each of said illegal and forbidden acts so done.”
The petition avers that Foster resides in the city of New Orleans, and has been and is continually violating the provisions of the act by making surveys of the hatches of sea-going vessels arriving at that port, and of damaged goods, and ha? *247 been and is engaged in acting as, and performing tbe duties wbicb belonged to, the master and wardens of tbe port.
An injunction was prayed for. It was granted by tbe lower court, and tbe judgment was affirmed by tbe Supreme Court of tbe State. A writ of error was thereupon sued out by Foster, and tbe case is thus brought before this court for review.
Tbe defendants in error have failed to enter .their appearance, and no brief in their behalf has been submitted. We shall, therefore, devote but few remarks to tbe case.
Tbe Constitution of tbe United States, art. 1, sect. 8, gives to Congress tbe power “to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among tbe several States, and with tbe Indian tribes.”
That tbe provisions of this act' are regulations of both foreign and inter-state commerce is a - proposition wbicb requires no argument to support it. They are a clog and a blow to all such commerce in tbe port to wbicb they relate. Their enactment involved a power wbicb belongs exclusively to Congress, and wbicb a State could not, therefore, properly exercise. In Steamship Company v. Port Wardens, 6 Wall. 31, it was held that a statute of a State' enacting that tbe master and wardens of a port within it should be entitled to demand and receive, in addition to other fees, tbe sum of five dollars, whether called on to perform service or not, for every vessel arriving in that port, was a regulation of commerce, and was unconstitutional and void. If, tbe constitutional objection was well taken there, a multo fortiori is it fatal here. Tbe act is not, in tbe sense of tbe Constitution, an inspection law. Tbe object of such laws is to certify tbe quantity and value of tbe articles inspected, whether- imports or exports, for tbe protection of buyers and consumers. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 203; Brown v. Maryland, 12 id. 419; Clintsman v. Northrup, 8 Cow. 46; Bouv. Law Dict. “ Inspection; ” Story’s Const. sects. 1017. 1024; Neilson v. Garza, 2 Woods, 290. Tbe purpose of this act is to furnish official evidence for tbe parties immediately concerned, and, where tbe goods are damaged, to provide for and regulate their sale. Master and Wardens v. Ship Hawes, 6 La. Ann. 390.
Besides tbe unreason and tbe oppressive character of tbe *248 act as regards ship-owners and consignees, it is an invasion of the rights of persons outside of these classes. If such a monopoly, sustained by such sanctions, may be validly given to the master and wardens, why may they not also, at prices not agreed upon by the parties, nor according to the market value, but at rates arbitrarily fixed by law, be authorized exclusively to load and unload ships, to furnish them with all needful supplies, and to perform all the services of consignees, commission merchants, and ship-brokers, touching incoming and outgoing cargoes ? Each of these imagined cases is a parallelism to the case before us, and only another step in the same direction.
We hold the statute to be void.
In expressing these views, we have no. purpose to impugn any thing heretofore said by this court as to the power of the States to establish inspection, quarantine, health, and other regulations, within the sphere of their acknowledged authority. The constitutional validity of such regulations is as clear as the power of Congress to establish regulations of commerce. It is no objection to the former that both operate upon the- same subject. Gilman v. Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713; Ex parte McNeil, 13 id. 236.
Judgment reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the petition.
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